Institutional formation begins with land.
Where land is formally constituted under Charter, it becomes ordered ground within a defined Territorial Domain.
The Institutional Seat establishes the permanent architectural and territorial anchor.
All subsequent structuring proceeds in relation to that anchor.
Formation does not begin with development.
It begins with delineation, governance, and continuity fixed in advance.
Not all land is suitable for institutional constitution.
Qualified land must meet conditions that enable permanence, territorial legibility, and long-term viability.
Primary criteria include:
The Institution evaluates land according to structural, ecological, and civilizational criteria.
Institutional formation proceeds through defined stages:
Each phase reinforces continuity before growth.
Formation requires alignment of land, governance, and capital.
The Institutional Seat remains the structural anchor.
Domain land may support productive or developmental activity within defined parameters.
Capital may participate in alignment with the Charter.
Foundational conditions are not subordinated to episodic economic interest.
The Institution constitutes territory selectively.
Formation proceeds only where long-horizon coherence can be sustained across generations.
Continuity is established before expansion.